ABSTRACT

This book delivers an admirably comprehensive and rigorous analysis of African oral literatures and performance.

Gathering insights from distinguished scholars in the field, the book provides a range of contemporary interdisciplinary perspectives in the study of oral literature and its transformations in everyday life, fiction, poetry, popular culture, and postcolonial politics. Topics discussed include folklore and folklife; oral performance and masculinities; intermediated orality, modern transformations, and globalisation; orality and mass media; spoken word and imaginative writing. The book also addresses research methodologies and the thematic and theoretical trajectories of scholars of African oral literatures, looking back to the trailblazing legacies of Ruth Finnegan, Harold Scheub, and Isidore Okpewho.

Ambitious in scope and incisive in its analysis, this book will be of interest to students and scholars of African literatures and oral performance as well as to general readers interested in the dynamics of cultural production.

part I|76 pages

Recapturing tradition

chapter 1|21 pages

Elfrieda Binga’s “Berseba”

Constructing history and identity in a rural Namibian village

chapter 2|25 pages

“The Crocodile’s Wife”

Content and communication strategy in a tale of transformations

chapter 3|12 pages

‘The aged, the infirm and the effeminate’

Rhetorical strategies in election rally songs from Nigeria and Lesotho

part II|54 pages

The word made flesh

part III|80 pages

Orality at crossroads

chapter 9|25 pages

African verbal arts online

Intermediality and “technauriture”

chapter 10|21 pages

Writer-reader interaction in newspaper serial writing in Tanzania

The transformation of an oral storytelling mode

chapter 12|21 pages

Go fetisa lekoalo/Beyond literature

Orality, poetry and music in post-apartheid spoken word poetry

part IV|44 pages

The scholar as artist

chapter 14|12 pages

In praise of counter-hegemony

Isidore Okpewho and the alternative discourse in African (oral) literature

chapter 15|14 pages

Isidore Okpewho

Scholarship, imaginative writing, and the assertion of the African sensibility

chapter 16|13 pages

Choosing two sides equally

An interview with Isidore Okpewho